Many a time, we end up being
selfish and self-centered. Seldom do we look beyond our needs and interests and
seldom do the needs and plight of others bother us. Living for others is now the
motto of only a few noble souls. We fail to realize that while selfishness keeps
the mind under constant pressure, selflessness keeps it serene.
Instances of our selfishness are
at times subtle and at times blatant. We are selfish when we do not give time to
our children, our parents and our loved ones; we are also selfish when we do not
shower praises our contemporaries deserve; not solving the problems of others
when we very well can also falls in this ambit; not spending on the needy for
fear of ending up poor is also a selfish act; we are selfish when we do not
realize that a wedding function or festivity might bother our neighbours; we are
also selfish in not making du‘ā for others as much and as frequently as we can;
a thing as small as smiling to make someone’s day too at times does not cross
our mind.
Selfishness, it seems, is deeply
ingrained in us and we need a constant effort to get the better of it. Perhaps
the starting point to combat it is to start with not so difficult a task: we can
begin by just looking around our house to find things which will never be needed
by us and which are totally redundant. Experience shows that if one looks with
such an eye, one ends up with loads and loads of such things. Parting ways with
them should not be very difficult as these things have little or no use for us
in the first place.
Some of the following tips may
help us further in this effort:
1. We should stop taking credit
for good deeds we do, and in fact hide these deeds from others thinking that God
knows them and He will duly reward us.
2. We should take up some
voluntary work and try to spend time, effort and our skills for others.
3. We should save money every
month specially to use it for the welfare of the needy. This money should be
over and above the zakāh amount.
4. Reading inspirational stories
of selfless people and spending time in their company if one is lucky enough to
have them around helps a lot.
5. A selfish motive may be of help
here: We can forget our own pain if we become selfless. When we live and work
for others, it makes us see how better off we are than so many others and this
makes us thankful and satisfied souls.
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